Phosphatidic acid counteracts S-RNase signaling in pollen by stabilizing the actin cytoskeleton

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Abstract

S-RNase is the female determinant of self-incompatibility (SI) in pear (Pyrus bretschneideri). After translocation to the pollen tube, S-RNase degrades rRNA and induces pollen tube death in an S-haplotype-specific manner. In this study, we found that the actin cytoskeleton is a target of P. bretschneideri S-RNase (PbrS-RNase) and uncovered a mechanism that involves phosphatidic acid (PA) and protects the pollen tube from PbrS-RNase cytotoxicity. PbrS-RNase interacts directly with PbrActin1 in an S-haplotype-independent manner, causing the actin cytoskeleton to depolymerize and promoting programmed cell death in the self-incompatible pollen tube. Pro-156 of PbrS-RNase is essential for the PbrS-RNase-PbrActin1 interaction, and the actin cytoskeleton-depolymerizing function of PbrS-RNase does not require its RNase activity. PbrS-RNase cytotoxicity enhances the expression of phospholipase D (PbrPLDδ1), resulting in increased PA levels in the incompatible pollen tube. PbrPLDδ1-derived PA initially prevents depolymerization of the actin cytoskeleton elicited by PbrS-RNase and delays the SI signaling that leads to pollen tube death. This work provides insights into the orchestration of the S-RNase-based SI response, in which increased PA levels initially play a protective role in incompatible pollen, until sustained PbrS-RNase activity reaches the point of no return and pollen tube growth ceases.

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Chen, J., Wang, P., de Graaf, B. H. J., Zhang, H., Jiao, H., Tang, C., … Wu, J. (2018). Phosphatidic acid counteracts S-RNase signaling in pollen by stabilizing the actin cytoskeleton. Plant Cell, 30(5), 1023–1039. https://doi.org/10.1105/tpc.18.00021

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